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Encyclopedia > East Coast blues

East Coast blues casts a wide net covering all of Piedmont blues--a style that relied on fast, virtuosic fingerpicking and added influences such as ragtime--as well as the urbanized R&B of New York blues and countless smaller regional styles. The Piedmont blues is a type of blues music characterized by a unique fingerpicking method on the guitar in which a regular, alternating-thumb bass pattern supports a melody using treble strings. ... Fingerpicking is playing the guitar using the fingertips or fingernails, rather than with a plectrum (or pick). It is usually used in Classical guitar styles, and some other acoustic styles, but it has found its way into other genres as well, including rock and roll, although its use in such... Ragtime is an American musical genre, enjoying its peak popularity around the years 1900–1918. ... Rhythm and blues (or R & B) is a musical marketing term introduced in the United States in the late 1940s by Billboard magazine. ... The New York blues is a type of blues music, characterized by significant jazz influences and a more modernized, urban feel than the country blues. ...


Notable Artists

Blues | Blues genres
Classic female blues - Country blues - Delta blues - Jazz blues - Jump blues - Piano blues
Blues-rock - Soul blues
African blues - British blues - Chicago blues - Detroit blues - Kansas City blues - Louisiana blues - Memphis blues - Piedmont blues - St. Louis blues - Swamp blues - Texas blues - West Coast blues
Musicians
Styles of American folk music
Appalachian | Blues (Ragtime) | Cajun and Creole (Zydeco) | Country (Honky tonk and Bluegrass) | Jazz | Native American | Spirituals and Gospel | Tejano
Louis Jordan (July 8, 1908 - February 4, 1975) was an African-American jazz and rhythm & blues musician who, unlike many of his black peers, was highly popular with mainstream audiences in the post-swing era. ... Blind Boy Fuller (born Fulton Allen) was an American blues guitarist and vocalist. ... Saunders Terrell, better known as Sonny Terry, was born in Greensboro, North Carolina in 1911 and died on March 11, 1986 in Mineola, New York. ... For other uses, see blues (disambiguation) The blues is a vocal and instrumental music form based on the pentatonic scale and often on the twelve-bar chord progression. ... Blues can be categorized into a number of genres. ... This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ... The Delta blues is one of the earliest styles of blues music. ... Jazz blues is a musical style that combines jazz and blues. ... The jump blues is a type of blues music, characterized by a jazzy, saxophone (or other horn instruments) sound, driving rhythms and shouted vocals. ... Piano blues refers to a variety of blues styles, sharing only the characteristic that they use the piano as the primary musical instrument. ... Blues Rock or Blues-rock is a fusion genre of music which combines elements of the blues with rock and roll. ... Soul blues is a style of blues music developed in the early late 1960s and 1970s and combining eliments of soul music and urban contemporary music. ... The British blues is a type of blues music that originated in the late 1950s. ... The Chicago blues is a form of blues music that developed in Chicago by adding electricity, drums, piano, bass guitar and sometimes saxophone to the basic string/harmonica Delta blues. ... Detroit blues is blues music played by musicians resident in Detroit, Michigan, particularly that played in the 1940s and 50s. ... The Louisiana blues is a type of blues music that is characterized by plodding rhythms that make the sound dark and tense. ... The Memphis Blues is the title of a tune and song published by W.C. Handy in 1912. ... The Piedmont blues is a type of blues music characterized by a unique fingerpicking method on the guitar in which a regular, alternating-thumb bass pattern supports a melody using treble strings. ... The St. ... The swamp blues is a form of blues music that is highly evolved and specialized. ... Texas blues is a subgenre of the blues. ... The West Coast blues is a type of blues music characterized by jazz and jump blues influences, strong piano-dominated sounds and jazzy guitar solos (which originated from Texas blues players relocated to California). ... Performers in the blues style range from primitive, one-chord Delta players to big bands to country music to rock and roll to classical music. ... American roots music is a broad category of music including country music, bluegrass, gospel, ragtime, jug bands, Appalachian folk, blues, Tejano and Cajun and Native American music. ... Appalachian folk music is a distinctive genre of folk music originating in the Appalachia region of the United States of America. ... For other uses, see blues (disambiguation) The blues is a vocal and instrumental music form based on the pentatonic scale and often on the twelve-bar chord progression. ... Ragtime is an American musical genre, enjoying its peak popularity around the years 1900–1918. ... The music of Louisiana, like other cultural aspects of the state, can be divided in to three general regions. ... Zydeco is a form of folk music, originated in the beginning of the 20th century among the Creole peoples of south-west Louisiana and influenced by the music of the French-speaking Cajuns. ... Country music, also called country and western music or country-western, is an amalgam of popular musical forms developed in the Southern United States, with roots in traditional folk music, Celtic Music, Blues, Gospel music, and Old-time music. ... Honky tonk was originally the name of a type of bar common throughout the southern United States, also Honkatonk or Honkey-tonk. ... Bluegrass music is considered a form of American roots music with its own roots in the English, Irish and Scottish traditional music of immigrants from the British Isles (particularly the Scots-Irish immigrants of Appalachia), as well as the music of rural African-Americans, jazz, and blues. ... Jazz master Louis Armstrong remains one of the most loved and best known of all jazz musicians. ... There are hundreds of tribes of Native Americans (called the First Nations in Canada), each with diverse musical practices, spread across the United States and Canada (excluding Hawaiian music). ... A spiritual is an African American song, usually with a Christian religious text. ... Gospel music may refer either to the religious music that first came out of African-American churches in the 1930s or, more loosely, to both black gospel music and to the religious music composed and sung by white southern Christian artists. ... Tejano is also the name given to Texans of Mexican or Spanish origin. ...

  Results from FactBites:
 
Archie Edwards Biography - Archie Edwards Blues Heritage Foundation - Washington's Home of the Piedmont Blues (1836 words)
Archie Edwards was born the third son of Roy and Pearl Edwards on September 4, 1918, on a farm near Union Hall, Virginia.
Duffel Bag Blues is based on his army experience, and while on the road, he wrote I Called My Baby Long Distance, a great bottle-neck number, after he called his wife from a hotel room.
Blues in general is under-recorded; Piedmont blues, especially so.
East Coast Piedmont Blues - Leslie Riddle (603 words)
Maybelle Carter, A.P.'s wife and guitarist for the band, is noted as having learned much in the way of guitar technique from Mr.
Like many blues men of his day, Riddle relocated to Rochester, New York, in 1942.
Red River Blues: The Blues Tradition in the Southeast.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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